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licaAxle Grease loricant for axles in the world*- wearing and very ad hesive. ’ Makes a heavy load draw like a light one. S^ves h-lf the wear on wagon and tea\i, and increases the earning capacity of your outfit. Ask your dealer for Mica Axle Grease. STANDARD OIL CO. Calmage Sermon ( By Rev. Frank De Witt Talmajfe. D. D. Winthrop College Scholarehlp and Entrance Examination. The exauiinatlon for the award of vacant Scholarships in Wint hrop College and for tiie adniisNion of new students whl hein'ld at tli** County Conrt Mouse on Friday, July 5th at 9 a.m. Applicants must not oe less tli u fifteen years of atre. Wiien scholarships are vacateo «itrr .Inly 5. they wil! be awarded to those making the hitchest average at tills examination, provided they meet tin condi tions "overnimr the award. AppH ants for Scholarships should write to President John son before tbe examination for Scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tult on The next session will open S* pteuber is li*07. For further information and cataloirue, ad-' dress Pre*. O. B. Johnson, Hock Hill, S. C. law July 5-nd. Los Angeles, Cal., June 2.—In his ser mon the preacher draws from the matchless architectural skill, the pa tience, Industry and wisdom of the spider a material as well as a spiritual lesson. The text Is Proverbs xxx. 28, “The spider taketh hold with her hands and Is In kings’ palaces.” Have you ever been through any of the famous royal palaces of Europe? Have you ever had a guide take you through Windsor castle, where the Eng lish king and <jueen live, or through the Tullerles and Versailles, where the French rulers have lived, or through Peterhof, built by Peter the Great, where the Russian crowned heads lived, or through the Quirlnal, where the Italian rulers live, or through the Imperial palaces flanking Unter den Linden, where the emperor of Ger many and the members of the Hohen- zollern family live? These palaces are something more than domiciles for kings and queens and princes and prin cesses. They are treasuries of art and CLEMSON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE Scholarship and Entranca Examination to Freshman Claas The ‘-vin niition for the award of scholar sMns from < le rokr-e- County •win admission to freshman class will lie held at the County court house on Friday July 5. a! !i a. in. Ap plicants for scholarships may seeure blank application forms from tbe County Superln tenderit of Education. These bl inks must he tilled out properly and filed with the County Superintendent before the heirinninir of trie examination. Thote taking the examination foreniran a toihe Freshman class and not trying for a scholarship should tile their ap plication with tin 1'resldeiit MeU. Theschol- arshipsar* worth ?U0,m d free tuition. One scholarship student from efwh county may select the i'e.rtl e course, other must take one of th- Axr. ultural u. urse>. Examina tion paper v ill !>e furnished but each appli cant sli L.o provide Mmselt with scratch p i per. Tie numher < f seln.dtrships to lie awarded w i ante un -ed latet. P. H. MELL, President. Clemsou College. S. C. May i4-to-July 5 it-a w. COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON 1786 Cbarleetcn, S. C. 1907 FJKli Yea: Begins Iseptember :i7th. Letter- . ScSen-e. Engineering. One scholar slop to each county of South Carolina, giv ing fret tuition, fuition $10. Board and furnished roon. in Dormitory. $11. a month- Ail candidates for admission are permitted * to compete for vacant Boj re scholarships ^ which pay IKK) a year. Kuuance Examina tions Will be held in the County Court House on Friday, .1 u»y ith, at 9 a t% For catalogue address Harrison Randolph, -lulv 5 lt-a-w-p<l. President. NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice jS hereby given that on Saturday. .Tune 29th next, we will apply to Hon. j. E. Webster, Probate Judge, at his office at the courthouse in Gaffney. S. C., at 10 o’clock a. m., for a final settlement and discharge as executors of the estate of Wm. F. Bye, deceased. All persons holding claims against said estate must ap pear and pres^gM|A same at or be fore that time^PW^ forever barred. R. F. Dye, MJss Florence Dye, Wm. T. Dye, Executors estate \\Sn. F. Dye, de ceased. Pub in Gaffney Ledger June 7, 14, 21 and 28. 1907. literature. They contain great art gal leries and museums. They are great libraries. They are filled with price less historical relics. And they are built in the midst of beautiful gardens, where the tossing, tumbling fountains have myriad; <>f rainbows reflected froin their falling waters by day and where the statues carved by the great est < f sculptors and the most exquisite of flowers are revealed to the guests by the many lights by night which make the midnight as light as the midday. King Solomon’s tmiaces were the best example of archil'■ tural beauty of his time. Tims when Solomon was using in my text the symbol of the king’s palace he . is praetioaily saying: ‘‘The king's p:!:u-e is a treasure house. There eoine the greatest of architects and the i st wonderful of sculptors to work their skill in stone. There | come the finest artists to paint their pictures. 'Uicre come the magicians of the ! iota to bring their offerings of Damascene rugs and their most ex- | quisite tape- trie::. There come the' most w mderfui horticulturists to lay j | out their gardens. All that wealth and beauty and human power opn give is to lie found in the king’s pwaees.” One morning early King Solomon is : walking through the rooms of his pal ace. Suddenly he stops and begins to study something very carefully. It is a spider's web. During the night the 1 spider has crawled Into tbe house and swung a suspension bridge and there gone to work. T’p and down he has crawled. Jle lowered himself from the celling and climbed up from the win dow sills. He knotted his thread here and spun his network there. Then a servant comes into the room and with a broom he is about to brush this spider’s web away. “Leave it alone,” Solomon says. “I never studied one before. How marvelous is the work manship of this silken web! Why, in all the splendors of my palace there is not a greater wonder than this spider ' web.” Then King Solomon takes out , his notebook and writes down the 1 words of my text. ‘‘The spider taketh 1 hold with her bands and is in kings’ threads. Then she would stretch the warp threads perpendicularly up and down. Then with her own hands she would put in the fillings, winding them horizontally in anti out until the cloth was made. Thus it was a weary, tedious task to make a piece of cloth in olden times. While the woman’s work would occupy days and weeks, It would take a spider only a few hours to spin her weh. Thus King Solomon was comparing the making of a spider's web to the old fashioned, prim itive ways in which the women of his time wove the garments for their hus bands and brothers and sous and fa thers. A Royal Weaver. But, though the weaving of the gar ments in olden times was considered one of the most tedious of tasks, yet it was looked upon by all true women as one of the noblest of occupations. No true princess, no true queen In a royal palace, was too high or too rich to perform this duty for her men folks. In the last chapter of Proverbs an oriental queen gives a description of a perfect woman. I have always be lieved that description was a filial pic ture of her own mother. What does the royal author say? “She seeketh wool and flax and worketli diligently with her hands.” This means that the queen and her women made the gar ments that her husband wore to battle and to bis kingly receptions. And she was not the only royal personage who boasted that the women who wore the royal purple were the same women who wove their royal garments. Alex ander the Great never put a coat about j his shoulders that was not made by i his own mother. With pride he showed j the Persian princes who came to visit ; his court the many lieautiful robes which were the results of ttie skill of i Olympias, who was the daughter of a I chieftain, the wife of a sovereign and the mother of a conqueror. When the Egyptian queen desired to make a present to the Spartan princess Helen, on whose account the Trojan war was waged, she sent to her a piece of her own embroidery. Ah, do not tell me that the spider that is a strand maker, a spinner, a weaver, has nr.f a royal occupation. If the queens and prin- eesses of old, with all tbe wealth of the royal palaces, thought it not be neath their dignity to work with their I fingers for their loved ones, surely it is as royal an occupation for the wives and mothers and daughters and sisters of today to care for the temporal wants of their dear ones in the modern homes. I wish that the royal occupations of Queen Olympias might be in vogue among our women of today. I would that the needle might continue to be one of the scepters of female influence, localise it is the type of female in dustry. like th;* spinning wheel and the ancient distaff and spindle. I would that the wives and the mothers and the daughters of our present generation might not feel that their intellectual advancement raises them above the duty of looking after the temporal wel fare of their homes. Our picture gal leries and popular hooks contain por traits of women in gorgeous attire, but I think that if we had an artist to paint the portrait that is dearest to our memory we would not ask him to find the most flaring colors he had, but to paint the quiet, dull dress that was worn in our nurseries in which mother used to put us to bed. We can see her now as she sat by a table on which was placed a lamp. In her hand would be a needle and a darning gourd and a stocking with a big bole in it. By our mother’s sifle wouM be a big pile of clothes which site was mending, and as we would look at that familiar pic ture we would say: “Ves, she was al- protectlng webs. There they say to the insect hordes which are trying to destroy them: “Stay out or I will slay you. Stay out! God has sent me to protect the grass and protect the crops and protect the flowers. Stay out! I am Go4P®sentinel and man’s guardian. Stay out! Stay out! Stay out!” A Net For Insects. A spider’s web Is nothing more or !c i s than a net set t<» catch the flies and the locusts and the grasshoppers, as the fisherman by the use of another kind of net is able to bring his food to land. These spiders’ nests are con structed In the air. An insect starts to fly or jump. The wing or leg of this Insect touches one of the threads of the web, which has an adhesive qual ity. Immediately that wing or leg, by being jerked or pulled, brings other threads of the web Into touch with other parts of the body. Similarly a human being sinks deeper and deeper Into the quicksands with every frantic struggle to escape. The more tbe In sect tries to get away the more help less he becomes. Then the spider, which has hitherto been concealed, hurries forth and deftly reaches out with one of her silken threads. She winds the insect round and round until he cannot move If he would. Then when the Insect is utterly helpless she gives her victim a fatal poisonous bite and slays It as quickly as tbe fang of a rattlesnake can kill tbe trembling rabbit. Thus God places the protect ing spider web over the crops and the trees. Thus God expects man to place ids protecting webs over tbe home and the church and the schoolhouse and society at large. There are great multitudes of Satanic destroyers ready to pounce upon them. God says: “Man, yon must guard these treasure houses of virtue and purity and truth. You must guard them. You must not only bow the knee and worship me. but you most wonderful symbol of gospel restoration which is to be found In the spider reproducing one of its broken limbs injured in battle. It is the gos pel symlHil which says, “Though a man has sinned seventy times seven—aye. though he may have sinned seven hun dred times seven hundred and has seemed to Smash all his earthly gospel usefulness forever—yet by tbe grace of God that sinner may be spiritually re created anti do valiant service for the Master before he dies.” A More Wonderful Fact. Now, a spider has a marvelous power of recreation in many ways. Wonder ful is the spider’s ability to fix a bro ken web. If on account of the rain a falling stone snaps some of the threads and entangles them like a snarled mass of twine, the spider waits patiently until the storm is over and fair weath er is at hand. The spider cannot af ford to waste any of her precious thread, but she always has enough thread to do her legitimate work. Like the manna in the wilderness, there is always enough food for each day, but not enough food for two days in the one gathering, so as soon as the clear weather comes the spider gets to work to repair the broken web, and one of the best signs of clear weather is the activity of the spider at work. Won derful also Is the cleanliness of the spider. Wlten the winds sweep the dust in great clouds over her web at once she goes to house cleaning. The spider knows what a good many house wives do not know that It is important to keep herself clean as well as a clean home. With all her hideousness she is as particular about her looks and as neat as a kitten which is continually washing the fur with her tongue as she purs by the kitchen stove, but more i wonderful than all is the spider’s aliili- ] ty to reproduce an injured member of 1 iter body. If one of her legs is snapped j A Most Valuable Agent The glycerine employed in Dr. Pierce’s medicines greatly enhances the medicinal properties which it extracts from native medicinal roots and holds In solution much bettor than alcohol would. It also possesses medicinal properties of its own, being a valuable demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and antiferment. It adds greatly to tiie efficacy of the Black Cherry- bark, Bloodroot, Golden Seal root, Stone root and Queen's root, contained in •Golden Medical Discovery”In subdning chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchial, throat and lung affections, for all of which these agents are recommended by stand ard medical authorities. In all cases where there is e wasting away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak stomach, as in the early stages of con sumption, there can be no doubt that gly cerine acts as a valuable nutritive and aids the Golden Seal root. Stone root, Queen’s root and Black Cherrybark in S romoting digestion and building up the esli and strength, controlling the cough and bringing about a healthy condition of tbe whole system. Of course, it must not be expected to work miracles. It will not cure consumption except in its earlier stages. It will cure very severe, obsti nate, hang-on, chronic coughs, bronchial and laryngeal troubles, and chronic sore throat with hoarseness. In acute coughs it is not so effective. It is in the lingering hang-on coughs, or those of long standing, even when accompanied by bleeding from longs, that it lias performed its most marvelous cures. Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D.,of Ben nett Med. College, Chicago, says of gly cerine: R In dyspepsia it serves an excellent purpose. Holding a tired quantity of tbe peroxide of hydrogen in solution, It is one of tbe best manufactured products of the present time in Its action upon enfeebled, disordered stom achs, especially if there la ulceration or ca tarrhal gastritis (catarrhal inflammation of stomach), it is a most efficient preparation. Glycerine will relieve many cases of pyrosis (heartburn) and excessive gastric (stomach) acidity.” •Golden Medical Discovery * enriches and parities the blood curing blotches, pimples, eruptions, scrofulous swellings and old sores, or ulcers. Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N. Y., for free booklet telling all about the native medicinal roots comiiosing this wonderful medicine. There is no alcohol in it. must also fight my satanlc foes as i off in battle she immediately proceeds well. By the myriads of protecting to grow another leg. The new leg may spider webs I would teach you this ies- j not be as long and ns strong as the lost son.” leg. but still it Is a leg. and with it she But I was very much surprised as I j * s ,0 011 !,n, l ^ ve - u;r an, l , *° began to study this subject to learn : that the spider was susceptible to the ; iuhucuce ui love. For years and years I had known that the spider was a NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that on , of a rc)V: .| s!) jder Saturday. June 22nd. 1907, I will ap-' _ . . ply to the Hion. J. E. Webster, Pro- A Ro y ;il Occupation, bate Judge, at his office at the court In {h( ‘ ,ii st Place, the spider has a bouse in Gaffney, s. C„ at 10 o’clock, ! royal occupation. She is a threadmak- a. m., for a final settlement and dis- i er, a weaver, a spinner. She has the palaces. If tiie wisest of all men ways sewing for u-c She was always could afford to sto !y the spider build- | working for us. She was always liv ing her web. surely we have a right' to make a sermon upon the life’s work Ing for us." May God continue to make our wives # and our daughters like our mothers gud grandmothers of old, queens of the home, with tbe royal scepter of a needle. An Example of Industry. But the spiders are nu>r<> than mere charge as administrator luq estate ; faculty' of producing a thread inside weavers. Thov not onlv sot the exam- cannibal. Just the same as the savage tribes of the African Kongo would go forth and battle against tbe neighbor ing tribes and then come home with rejoicing and kill and eat their prison ers captured In war, so spiders will not j only’ eat spiders of other families, but they will also cat their owu brothers and sisters and fathers and mothers. That is the reason spider silk cannot be developed and made marketable like the threads of the silkworms. Many years ago the Royal academy of France tried to develop the spider silk industry. The silk thread with which the spider surrounds her eggs is of a beautiful color, almost as strong ns that made by tbe silkworm. M. Bon of Languedoc manufactured arti cles" of wearing apparel out of tbe spider’s web. But the industry had to bo abandoned because the spiders would destroy one another until every one of them except the biggest and the strongest of them had been slain in their cells. Thus the spider used to be to me the symbol of ingratitude, feroc ity and bate. He was the symbol of all that was cruel and loathsome and repulsive. I thought God gave to the spider his hideous physiognomy, his rows of gleaming eyes, his bloated l»ody trunks adhering together by a small connection, as were the two bodies of the Siamese twins; his many Jointed, disproportionate legs, which make it possible for him to travel in any direction he would without turn ing around; his poisons which are se creted at the mandible tips and bis cannibalistic tendencies which compel him to live a hermit life, because God wanted every one to turn from the spider in complete disgust. But after I went on in my investigations 1 found that even tills low, vile, repulsive form of life as found in the spider is sus ceptible to tbe Influence of love. An Ancient Tradition. of H. Frank Wright, deceased. All persons having claims against said of her own Ixxiy and drawing It out, the only living creature that has the estate or interested therein, are re- ability to construct with that thread quired to present the same at or be fore said time, or bo forever barred, i G. B. Wright, Administrator. Pub. in Gaffney Ledger May 31, i June 7, 14 and 21, 19«)7. HOLLISTER'S Rocky Mountain "ea Nugget* A Busy Medicine Bu.y p ej5le. Bnngf Golden Health «nd Reward V gor. A opeciflc for Const!imion. Indigestion. Llvei and Kidney trojbies. l-lnunes. Eczema. Impure Blood. Bud Breulb, Sluicgish Bowels. Headaciie and Backache. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tab let to’tn 35 cents a hox. Genuino made by Hoixihtku Dkuo Companv. Madison, WU. GOLDEN NUGGFTS FOR SAIIOW PEOPLE PARKER’S KAIR BALSAM Clevur* and bt-tu! r.u tha hall. Pr<'iiK>ie« a luxir-aut growth. I.’»7er Paris t) t.oetor* Oray n.iir to n* Yothful Color. Cure* * aip u * o * * ! ,Ur laUiog. V I ► V ') uysrirt* Stic, anj •. those wonderfully d**: igned webs which are si*-n in the houses and barns, on the roads, in t!ie grasses and trees ev ery summer morning before the dew’s have evaiioratr 1 under the rising sun. The silkworm may be able to spin a cocoon, but the spider does more than that. The spider has the power to stand upon the branch of a tree and emit from her body a thread; then as 1 pie of Industry to man and woman and child, but they are to be recorded among tbe greatest benefactors of the human race. They are the greatest of ail destroyers of insect life. They are the mortal foe of the fly, the locust and tbe grasshopper. If It were not for the destroying work of the spider in all probability most of tbe labors of the farmer and the husbandman would go for naught. Then the plagues of Egypt would be here. The locusts and An ancient tradition states that when St. Felix of Xolaii was being pursued by tbe pagans who wished to put him to death he fled into a cave, and the spiders took pity on him and covered tiie entrance of the cave with a per fect web. There he lived for six long months, safely protected from his I would lie destroyers. That is a mere ! legend. But history is full of inci- i dents where men have made pets out j of spiders. When Peiisson was con- | fined for many months in the Bastille, her life work. Oh. that men and wo men who have been worsted in the liat- :!..> of : i;i c:>;.i.i iv .iw.o that wlieu they are saved by Jhe grace of God Christ will recreate them and renew them, and at once they can and must go f*>rth in ’.lie Master’s service and do something for him. The arachnoid group, to which the spiders belong, can be traced back as to their name to a Grecian mytholog ical maiden Arachne. She was of mor tal birth and was known far and wide for her wonderful skill in wee ing and embroidery. One day she < 1 *al!euged Minerva, tbe goddess of wisdom, to a trial of the liberal arts. Minprva, in the guise of an old woman, tried to dissuade her in vain. The goddess then threw off her disguise and the competition began. Faster and faster went the fingers. Arachne, In her pride, wove in her cloth a picture of the failures and the helplessnesses and the sins of the gods, as some of us try to justify our sins by complaining of tiie injustice of our bard lot. Miner va, angered by Aracbne’s presumption, changed the taunting maiden Into tbe form of a spider, so that, despised of all mankind, she might go on spinning and weaving forever. Oh, is that to lie our fate? Shall we blaspheme against and turn our backs upon the Saviour’s pleadings t< r the higher life and have him say, “Depart from me, for I know yon not?” Or shall we be like a spider which taketh hold with her han&s and is In kings’ palaces? Shall we not dwell In the king's palaces of God’s love? Shall we not stop living in the dark caverns of sin? Shall we dwell in the king’s palaces of a Saviour’s atonement, where he will guard us and bless us and keep us forever with him? It rests entirely with us where we shall dwell through eternity. For today the Divine King bids us come and dwell with him In his earthly and heavenly palaces. [CopyrlKht. 1907. by Louis Klopsch.] II TOIL® T© Hil&fllrfl© FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice Is hereby given to all con cerned that I shall apply to Hon. B. Webster. Probate Judge for Cher okee county. South Carolina, at hie office. Gaffney. S. C., on Saturday, June 8th. 1907, at 11 o’clock a. m. for final settlement and discharge as guardian of the estate of Miss Agne* Idelle Brown, minor, but now of age- J. N. Cudd, Guardian. Pub. in Gaffney Ledger May 17, 31 and June 7, 1907. ft-o Halt the grasshoppers would literally de- thls thread grows longer and longer stroy all the crops. The work of check- the famous French prison, his only It is carried backward and forward by inj* or keeping down tbe dangerous in- j companion was a spider which he do- the winds until It touches another | crease of insect life by the spider is mesticated. When Peiisson played on branch, where It Is anchored. Then the spider, having connected tbe two branches by this single thread, as an architect bridges the sides of a river by a cable strand, goes above that strand and drops down and goes be low that strand and climbs up and winds around and around and around simply infinite in Its importance. During the darkest days of Robert Bruce’s life, after the king of Scotland had been defeated In five different battles and deserted by all his follow ers and while be himself was a fugi tive chased by the English soldiers, he lay down one night to sleep in a little a musical Instrument the spider would come regularly to eat files out of his hand. It was written by Staveley that a certain Frenchman tamed over 800 different spiders, which would come to him to be fed as a lot of chickens wil) run to the call of the farmer’s wife when she is about to feed them. in circles after she has united her \ rave. You all rememlier the legendary 1 Though the spiders seem to be canni- F0LEY5H0NEMAR Of— QoMei Prevote Pee-rmnele Dewitt’s ggff Salve main threads until she finishes tbe web. Never did a human weaver do such symmetrical and delicately de signed work as does the spider. This work of the spider In King Sol omon’s time was tin; more marvelous story as printed in your childhood bal*. yet the natural love of a spider primer. During the night by the camp- for her young is very strong. It is fire’s light the noblest of all Scotch- ' men watched a little spider spin his ; wel) over the mouth of that cave, j Yfhen morning came a pursuing squad LECTRIC BITTERS THE BEST FOB BILIOUSNESS AND KIDNEYS. F0UEY!SH0NBT^TAR •*09* tl&« and lx«*la Haags PEKING'S NEW DISCOVERY WM Surely Stop That Coach. Subscribe for The Ledger, |1 a veer. because it was like the human weaving 0 f English soldiers passed that way. of that time, only more rapid. Then They were hunting for the fugitive all the weaving was done by hand and king. When one of the soldiers came in the most primitive style. If a wo- , up to the entrance of that cave and man wished to make a garment, in the 1 wa8 about to enter another soldier beginning she had to make her own thread. She would take a handful of wool and stretch It out Into a strand about two yards long. Then she would attach a bobbin to that strand and ■pin It round and round. Then, after she had twisted that strand Into a thread, she would wind it up and called* “Xo need of going in there. Don’t you see a spider has spun bis web over the entrance to that cave? X'o man would go in there without breaking it down.” Thus Robert Bruce’s life was saved by a spider's web. But I want to tell you that tbe spider is Just as much the savior and ■tretch out another strand of wool and protector of man today as he was sup- H-in It Into a thread. She made each | posed to be in times of old In Scottish th-ead alone. It took the woman In | history. Over every tree branch, In oklen times as long to make one thread [ every flower garden, about every field es It does now for a bobbin boy In ; of grass and crop of wheat, the spMere one of our factories to make 400 [ every night and day are spinning their like the love of the eagle for her nestlings. She will fiercely battle for her eggs before they are hatched. When the eggs are hatched, she will allow the young spiders to climb upon her back, and she will carry them for long distances. Thus by the lesson of the spider we can assert that even In tiie most depraved and ferocious and cruel and bitter and sinful forms of human life there lies somewhere In the heart the germ seeds of love. If this crude form of love can only be reached In tbe right way for God, It can be developed Into a true, pure, ■potless form of Christian life, even as tbe love of a spider through tbe musical notes of a Peiisson can make this repulsive animal answer to the calls of love. But there Is still a more wonderful fact about these spiders than any I hare as yet mentioned. It is tbe Just stop an| one moment abol printed stationery, firm or i n d i v i d u a I’s printed stationery is an index to his business judgement.' 1 If you want something that you can be sure will make a good impression where- ever seen bring your job printing of every des cription to us. . We guarantee satisfac tion and can do work in a “hurry.” Hie Ledger, Gaffney, S. C. d/0 Mail orders receive prompt attention. Dr.KIng’s New Life Pills The beet in the world. THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP Arbuckles* ARIOSA comes in one pound packages only, sealed for your MPtoction to insure your getting the genuine old- fashioned Arbuckles’ ARIOSA Coffee everytime. Be real angry if they send you a substitute, which is not as good and may in time ruin your digestion and nerves. j Ksdol DypeptJa Car» KENNEDY’S UU(ATIVEHONEY»TAB M Ckvtr SImms u4 Etatr Sec ra Ever? BetfW. 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